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  • Now you've probably heard of the Leidenfrost effect. That's when a

  • volatile droplet like water levitates over a hot surface because

  • it's floating on a little cushion of its own vapor. Here I'm gonna try to create

  • the inverse Leidenfrost effect where we levitate a droplet on a bath of liquid

  • nitroge. It's inverse because the droplet is not actually creating the vapor, it's

  • the bath beneath, it's the liquid nitrogen that's creating the vapor.

  • There have been a couple of recent papers about this phenomenon so I called up one

  • of the scientists to ask how can I do this and how does it work?

  • hello -hi -hi, how are you?

  • Good, and you? -I am doing very well.

  • So, I was gonna ask you, do you think I

  • would be able to replicate this without too much difficulty? If you have liquid

  • nitrogen. yes. It's it's really simple. it's really basic what you need is a

  • polystyrene box like 20 by 20 centimeters. A bit thick so that it insulates

  • and then I had two beakers one like that size and another one that is smaller in

  • which the experiments... ah yeah. I will put him away

  • Um, so two beakers...

  • okay so when you have a look at this setup I have a piece

  • of styrofoam that has a cylindrical cutout in it into which I have poured

  • some liquid nitrogen and the purpose of that is to get this outer space as cold

  • as possible and insulated from the rest of the air. Then I have this large beaker

  • that is full of liquid nitrogen. As you can see, it is boiling and then I have

  • the innermost beaker which is not boiling so I have still liquid nitrogen

  • in the middle that is not boiling and that is what I want because that is

  • where we can actually conduct the experiment and try to get the inverse

  • Leidenfrost effect to work.

  • Okay I have 100 microliters of silicone oil and I'm

  • gonna attempt to drop it onto this bath of liquid nitrogen whoa oh my God look

  • at that. what?! there were a whole bunch of droplets and

  • they were all levitating on the surface. Now that they are in there now the

  • liquid nitrogen is boiling so this is not good...

  • hey, future Derek here. Sorry my hair looks stupid I'm gonna go get it cut

  • but that last experiment didn't go very well because the liquid nitrogen in the

  • middle beaker was boiling and there was nothing I could do about it so I tested

  • a few droplets on there but you couldn't really see the effect nicely because of

  • that boiling bath so I'm gonna try again today clean beakers new liquid nitrogen

  • let's give it a shot

  • there it is, got a droplet of silicone oil and it is bouncing around back and

  • forth. That is pretty cool!

  • What's amazing about this effect is that it can

  • continue almost indefinitely. It's been observed to last for tens of minutes

  • unlike the Leidenfrost effect where the droplet is used up making the vapor

  • cushion that supports it, here the supporting vapor comes from the bath so

  • it can continue indefinitely even after the drop has frozen.

  • The heat required to

  • evaporate the bath comes not only from the droplet but also from the warm

  • atmosphere around the experiment. although on my second attempt I was able

  • to prevent the small beaker of liquid nitrogen from boiling, my setup was a bit

  • unstable so the boiling in the outer beaker shook the inner beaker

  • interfering with the droplets motion but in Anaïs's professional setup you can

  • see how the drop always moves in straight lines. But why should the

  • droplet be moving at all? and what keeps it moving?

  • A lot of people have been putting drops on a bath and have observed the

  • movements but nobody has tried to explain it, like yet.

  • So how did you explain it?

  • there is something that happens at the interface so you have a floating drop

  • with a thin vapor layer above the bath and then what seems to happen is that

  • this vapor layer is not uniformly thick but then at some point there is a like a

  • tiny instability like a capillary wave that grows under it.

  • but why is there a wave?

  • just for example because you'd never deposit the drop perfectly,

  • nicely and smoothly so you you create tiny waves that come back below the drop

  • I think you can see that here as I add a droplet to the bath. Notice the waves

  • generated in the middle of the beaker? These little waves lead to an asymmetry

  • underneath the droplet where one side is higher than the other.

  • More nitrogen gas escapes out this side

  • Now you might think this would drive the droplet in

  • the opposite direction but it doesn't. the gas actually drags the droplet along

  • with it kind of like how wind over your

  • windshield pushes raindrops along.

  • What is great here is that this instability

  • instantly reappears each time the drop comes close to a wall.

  • So when you have a

  • wall in the bath you have a small liquid nitrogen meniscus so the drop starts to

  • climb it and then the propelling force reverses and then pushes it back

  • And this creates a nice star pattern so it's it's like self-propelled forever and

  • repelled from the walls which is which is very cool

  • So do you think this

  • research has applications and what sort of applications might those be?

  • if you imagine an embryo of an animal like a mouse or something. A very very

  • young embryo is like 10 cells so it's incredibly small. So what they do is like

  • they put it into liquid that allows cryopreservation and then freeze it. and

  • and what is great about this is what they do is they take the drop and put it

  • into liquid nitrogen and then it freezes. what... and if the freezing is fast enough

  • you you don't grow ice crystals so you preserve the embryo and what is

  • great about this is like if you imagine instead of just putting an oil drop

  • like what I did is like you put an embryo with the cryopreservance on

  • the liquid bath then you can you can make it into a canal like this and then you

  • can generate them like in a random way and move them around because they are

  • self-propelled so they would go in the direction that you want them to move so

  • you could imagine making something where you could at the same time

  • freeze your cells or chemicals and then move them along without generating any

  • contaminations because you're basically not touching them

  • that's an interesting potential application of this

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Now you've probably heard of the Leidenfrost effect. That's when a

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